Field trip to see the EPIC EHR in action at Palo Alto Medical Foundation

Field trip to see the EPIC EHR in action at Palo Alto Medical Foundation

I arranged to spend last Thursday afternoon with Peter Yu, at his El Camino Real office of the Palo Alto Medical Foundation (PAMF). PAMF has largely implemented EPIC as their EHR, and as Peter and I had an ASCO-related conference call scheduled, I was going to take the call with him and observe his EHR in action. The call was canceled, but he had three patients whom he had set up to see. The first patient was a young woman with newly operated small “triple negative” breast cancer, without axillary nodal involvement. We had a long discussion about prognosis and treatment, the current unavailability of a PARP inhibitor clinical trial, and the benefits and risks of participating in the available cooperative group trial, involving standard therapy with or without various bevacizumab schedules. Using the exam room computer terminal, Peter was able to use AdjuvantOnline! to illustrate the benefits of systemic therapy to the patient and her family in real time.

Another patient, a fellow with long standing myeloma now on lenalidamide, Peter saw emergently for cough and dehydration. After evaluating him, Peter showed me their CPOE implementaion, which he used to order a chest X-ray, CBC and biochem panel. He was also warned about drug interaction between the levofloxacin he was prescribing, and the warfarin that the patient was taking, and he produced a report for the patient which he handed to him, instructing him on how to adjust his warfarin.

Each exam room has a computer terminal mounted on the wall, the keyboard is set to be used in the standing position, and the monitor swivels so it can be viewed from most parts of the room (see photo). There is a proximity recognition system, so when Peter’s RFID-enabled name badge (which he wears around his neck) is in the vicinity, he is able to use the finger-print recognition system to access the system. (This likely saves minutes each day, avoiding repeated password sign-ins.)

For chemotherapy, they have used Intellidose for the last four years—pre-dating availability of EPIC’s Beacon Module, which Peter says is coming—and for documentation, they use a combination of templates and macros for routine patient care, and voice-recognition software from Dictaphone for the longer narratives. Though it sounds klugey, Peter was able to navigate through the screens and programs with alacrity, and his three visits that day would have, in aggregate, met the current iteration of “meaningful use.” (including e-prescibing, warning of medicine interaction, handing the patient a visit summary, and CPOE.)

I was also able to meet with Charlotte Mitchell, RN, who is the project manager of their EPIC implementation. She described a rolling implementation, with their metric being one analyst or clinical support person per fifty physicians. During their rolling implementation, Peter told me that the ratio seemed more like one-to-one, as there was a support person at or near the elbow of each doc, or at least available in the hallway outside the room. Charlotte also told me that they adjusted each physician’s clinical load during the implementation for a period of two weeks, and cut their patient numbers by fifty percent. When docs and nurses went for training, their clinic coverage also had to be assured. After one month, she thought that productivity was generally back to where it should be. She noted that some of her docs could close a visit (meaning complete their note and their bill) before walking out of the exam room.

Quite impressive.

Later, on Friday night at social function, I ran into a PAMF orthopedic surgeon, who is also using the EPIC system. A 1983 high school graduate, and thus putatively more computer savvy than my generation, he allowed how the availability of medical records was better with their EHR, and when he went to see one of their patients in the hospital, if they have a good internest, the H&P had been done. However, his distinct and strongly held opinion that the EHR slowed him down in the office: whereas in the paper world, his medical assistant would line up the X-rays on the view box, now he had to wait for his PACS to load the images after he signed on to the computer terminal; formerly he would have documented his findings on one page of paper, wherehas now he had to point and click, dictate, and type his way through a note; in the paper world he would have checked boxes on a form to schedule the return visit and submit charges, now he had to point and click his way through the form. He did tell me that he never filled out an X-ray requisition—he had a point that his time was too valuable—and he was happy to delegate that to his medical assistant. He did have some fair points—the hardware and network did not operate at “think speed”—usually defined as ½ second—for his x-ray viewing, the documentation software probably wasn’t the most user-friendly for an orthopedist likely suited by temperament and training to expressing himself in drawing and other non-grammatical written modes.

Disclaimer:

The ideas and opinions expressed on the ASCO Connection Blogs do not necessarily reflect those of ASCO. None of the information posted on ASCOconnection.org is intended as medical, legal, or business advice, or advice about reimbursement for health care services. The mention of any product, service, company, therapy or physician practice on ASCOconnection.org does not constitute an endorsement of any kind by ASCO. ASCO assumes no responsibility for any injury or damage to persons or property arising out of or related to any use of the material contained in, posted on, or linked to this site, or any errors or omissions.

Comments

James Vendel, BS

Mar, 03 2010 7:02 PM

Excellent post! Are most or all the physicians in Dr. Yu’s office using computers in the exam room, using technology to engage patients?

There seems to be a concern among physicians that computers in the exam room will interfere with the relationship between physicians and patients, but I have seen physicians successfully integrate the technology into the patient interaction by drawing them into the process. Seems even more relevant with MU requirements around patient access to their charts.

John Vernon Cox, DO, FASCO

Mar, 10 2010 2:03 PM

Very impressed (but would have expected nothing less from Peter!!).... A couple of comments:

I am an old doc. Our office has been on EHR for 30 months. We too, have a computer in every exam room. I quickly found out that using the computer screen (not as fancy as Peter's, tho' we have each monitor on an articulated arm) to show the day's labs - using the flow sheet view to discuss the 'next treatment' - or bringing up the radiology report as to prompt discussions about the recent CT results; and then type out ‘orders’ while in the room including the patient in the discussion == all add to the visit - not distract. I agree with Peter that patients nearly expect the computer to be part of the visit. Our system is not as integrated as Peter's but still prompts valuable discussions when used in the exam room. I know there have been some discussions about the ergonomics of the exam room (Doug has posted on this before). I am curious about discussions / information on ‘best practices’ or illustrations to get docs to use the EHRs that are in the rooms?

The other comment is about the speed. EHR's have slowed me down. As Doug outline's in his discussion with the orthopedist, integrating the technology into my visit does slow the visit. (I laughed at his mention of the ‘think speed’ of ½ second – our EHR is many times more ponderous than that!) I used to easily see patients / document / write orders and move on in 15 minute blocks. Now, I am schedule in 20 minute blocks. There are many efficiencies / safety improvements in the office. We capture charges more efficiently, have fewer FTEs that manage records, multiple parts of the clinic have access to the record simultaneously to accomplish their tasks in parallel (rather than serially when we dealt with the single paper chart). But I still see fewer patients. Maybe that is not all bad.

Peter Paul Yu, MD, FASCO, FACP

Mar, 04 2010 5:27 PM

The patients are very much aware of how the EHR is contributing to their health care because it becomes a focus of interaction, starting from when the medical assistant rooms the patient, pulls up the chart and reconciles the medication list with what the patient self reports to be taking. Later, I am able to display and graph lab results and pull up imaging studies to show the patient. If we discuss a plan of action, such as starting medication or obtaining a test, they can see that I actuate that process with CPOE in the room. The EHR tells me if the patient is registered in our patient portal (about 30% are right now) and if so I can tell them that the lab results and any comments I have will be available there for them to see.

I do not create my progress note in the room while with the patient. On the other hand, I didn't do that either when we were still on paper, since I find that distracting to me and impolite to the patient. As you can see from the photo, the monitor and keyboard swivel so that I can remain in line of sight of the patient.

The EHR rapidly becomes indispensible for managing our complicated, data intensive patients. For specialites such as orthopedics which are procedure related and the episodes of care are short, the value of the EHR and the documentation process appear to be less of a win win, at least in the short term. Howvever, if one stands back to see the overall picture of the patient, that documentation becomes an important part of the landscape. From that perspective, a patient centric healthcare system is not specialty centric.